taxonID	type	description	language	source
CD01D94308BAAE56C22B5AEAD76BE402.taxon	materials_examined	Material. Al Fanadir, near Hurghada, Egypt, 26 May 2009, two specimens 16 and 11 mm (preserved), leg. and photograph S Kahlbrock; numerous photographs from northern Egypt, S Kahlbrock and J Hinterkircher; numerous photographs from the Creek, Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, 1970 - 1994, W Pridgen.	en	Yonow, Nathalie (2018): Red Sea Opisthobranchia 5: new species and new records of chromodorids from the Red Sea (Heterobranchia, Nudibranchia, Chromodorididae). ZooKeys 770: 9-42, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.770.26378, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.770.26378
CD01D94308BAAE56C22B5AEAD76BE402.taxon	description	Description. Photographs of the two specimens depict the typical pattern of this species in the Red Sea (Plate 1): there are five black lines on the dorsum, which are broken in the larger specimen. These have the characteristic blurring behind the rhinophores, mid-body, and in front of the gills where the white in-between the black is darker. The middle black line runs anteriorly between the rhinophores. There is a submarginal white band completely encircling the notum followed by a thicker yellow-orange margin. The dorsal surface of the foot is white with an orange margin and two black lines that do not meet on the tip of the tail. The rhinophores are either the same colour as the mantle margin or more orange. The 7 - 9 gills are the same colour as the rhinophores and bear white pinnules. The body is elongate and the mantle is raised just in front of the gills. The foot is long and pointed, nearly 1 / 3 to 1 / 4 longer than the body length. The rhinophores are long and pointed, usually held out over the sides of the body in a characteristic manner. The gills are simply pinnate, arranged in a circle that is not closed posteriorly; the last gills are smaller than the others.	en	Yonow, Nathalie (2018): Red Sea Opisthobranchia 5: new species and new records of chromodorids from the Red Sea (Heterobranchia, Nudibranchia, Chromodorididae). ZooKeys 770: 9-42, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.770.26378, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.770.26378
CD01D94308BAAE56C22B5AEAD76BE402.taxon	distribution	Distribution. These are the first specimen records from the Red Sea but an individual had been photographed in the Jeddah area of the Red Sea as early as the 1970 ' s (W Pridgen pers. comm., Plate 2). There are subsequent records from the northern Red Sea (Yonow 2008) although it was never collected by the author. Chromodoris strigata is a western Pacific species with one record in the Indian Ocean, from Mozambique (Tibirica et al. 2017). The records from India as C. strigata (and C. colemani, Sreeraj et al. 2012) are most likely C. cf. hamiltoni Rudman, 1977 as are the records from Mozambique of Chromodoris sp. 1 (Tibirica et al. 2017).	en	Yonow, Nathalie (2018): Red Sea Opisthobranchia 5: new species and new records of chromodorids from the Red Sea (Heterobranchia, Nudibranchia, Chromodorididae). ZooKeys 770: 9-42, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.770.26378, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.770.26378
0ABBD6D9B4F65F7D200410718592103B.taxon	materials_examined	Material. Sha'ab steel tank, Hurghada, Egypt, 01 Aug 2009, 35 m depth on sand, one specimen 4.5 x 2.5 mm (preserved), leg. and photographs S Kahlbrock; photographs only, vicinity of Hurghada, Egypt, 08 Nov 2013, 13 July 2015, S Kahlbrock.	en	Yonow, Nathalie (2018): Red Sea Opisthobranchia 5: new species and new records of chromodorids from the Red Sea (Heterobranchia, Nudibranchia, Chromodorididae). ZooKeys 770: 9-42, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.770.26378, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.770.26378
0ABBD6D9B4F65F7D200410718592103B.taxon	description	Description. This species is unmistakable with its lemon yellow body bordered by a deep red line along the margin (Plate 3). The rhinophores and unipinnate gills are also lemon yellow. The tiny specimen was damaged, and missing most of its right rhinophore. The left rhinophore bears 12 lamellae, the edges of which are opaque white in life. The mantle margin of the preserved specimen is of uniform thickness, as is its edge despite the implications of the red line along the margin in life, which is thicker at intervals in the photographs.	en	Yonow, Nathalie (2018): Red Sea Opisthobranchia 5: new species and new records of chromodorids from the Red Sea (Heterobranchia, Nudibranchia, Chromodorididae). ZooKeys 770: 9-42, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.770.26378, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.770.26378
0ABBD6D9B4F65F7D200410718592103B.taxon	distribution	Distribution. This is the first specimen record of Diversidoris flava in the Red Sea; it was previously recorded by a series of photographs also from Eilat in the northern Red Sea no earlier than 2005 (Eilat, Yonow 2008: 199; http: // www. seaslugforum. net / find / 21083). The distribution of this somewhat uncommon species is throughout the Indo-Pacific Ocean; its recent arrival in the Red Sea may be due to shipping.	en	Yonow, Nathalie (2018): Red Sea Opisthobranchia 5: new species and new records of chromodorids from the Red Sea (Heterobranchia, Nudibranchia, Chromodorididae). ZooKeys 770: 9-42, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.770.26378, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.770.26378
674E9B00D97F64C427AB595B0B8FC6F1.taxon	materials_examined	Other material. The Creek, Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, 1980 s, photographs of one individual, J Kuchinke (Yonow 2008: 189, uppermost small photograph on right); one individual, photograph G Brown (Plate 4); Egypt, 1990 s, photograph of one individual, J Hinterkircher; Egypt, 28 Sept 1995, intertidal, photograph of one individual, A Valdes & E Mollo (HU- 015).	en	Yonow, Nathalie (2018): Red Sea Opisthobranchia 5: new species and new records of chromodorids from the Red Sea (Heterobranchia, Nudibranchia, Chromodorididae). ZooKeys 770: 9-42, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.770.26378, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.770.26378
674E9B00D97F64C427AB595B0B8FC6F1.taxon	diagnosis	Diagnosis. While the body shape and colour are similar to those of Glossodoris cincta, the marginal banding is diagnostic: the diffuse yellow innermost band has a sharp outer line bordering the distinct sky blue band, which is followed by a pitch-black margin visible on both sides of the mantle edge.	en	Yonow, Nathalie (2018): Red Sea Opisthobranchia 5: new species and new records of chromodorids from the Red Sea (Heterobranchia, Nudibranchia, Chromodorididae). ZooKeys 770: 9-42, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.770.26378, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.770.26378
674E9B00D97F64C427AB595B0B8FC6F1.taxon	description	Description. This species is distinctive with its fleshy body thrown into four primary and multiple secondary folds. The approximately 20 gills are simply pinnate but whorled around the anal papilla. The rhinophores issue from low raised sheaths, which may bear tiny white spots around the margin, and carry in the region of 21 lamellae. The body is cream with beige irregularities; this may be somewhat darker centrally in some individuals (Plate 4). The banding on the margin is distinctive: the creamy beige dorsum abruptly becomes more yellow, producing a band that is diffuse on the inside but abruptly demarcated on the outside. It is followed by a light blue line and the mantle margin is marked by a thick black line. This colour pattern is also present on the hyponotum. The gills have a beige-brown line up both sides, which meets over the top of each gill. The pinnules are opaque white. The rhinophores have a mottled beige stalk and the lamellate club is rather rounded. There is a white line up both sides and along the edges of the lamellae. The coloured banding remains on the preserved specimens (Figure 1 A). Ventrally, it is creamy beige, with the top of the foot a little darker but not as dark as the hyponotum. There are no coloured bands on the margin of the foot. The anterior margin of the foot is thickened, and the radula was already dissected upon reception. The radular formula is> 73 x approx. 50.0.50. There is no median thickening or rhachidian tooth present, but a small space in the middle (Figure 1 B). The first marginal tooth on each side bears four or five denticles on each side of the cusp. The cusp becomes much longer at approximately tooth 4 or 5, and the four or five denticles also become a little larger. The outermost teeth in the row are undifferentiated but somewhat reduced in cusp and root sizes; the denticles are also reduced in both size and number (Figure 1 C). The jaw rodlets are curved and bicuspid at the tips, 20 - 25 µm long (Figure 1 D).	en	Yonow, Nathalie (2018): Red Sea Opisthobranchia 5: new species and new records of chromodorids from the Red Sea (Heterobranchia, Nudibranchia, Chromodorididae). ZooKeys 770: 9-42, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.770.26378, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.770.26378
674E9B00D97F64C427AB595B0B8FC6F1.taxon	distribution	Distribution. Possibly endemic to the Red Sea. Only one unconfirmed published record from the Persian Gulf.	en	Yonow, Nathalie (2018): Red Sea Opisthobranchia 5: new species and new records of chromodorids from the Red Sea (Heterobranchia, Nudibranchia, Chromodorididae). ZooKeys 770: 9-42, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.770.26378, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.770.26378
674E9B00D97F64C427AB595B0B8FC6F1.taxon	etymology	Derivatio nominis. The specific epithet is built by combining the Greek κυανός and Latin marginata, referring to the cerulean blue submargin.	en	Yonow, Nathalie (2018): Red Sea Opisthobranchia 5: new species and new records of chromodorids from the Red Sea (Heterobranchia, Nudibranchia, Chromodorididae). ZooKeys 770: 9-42, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.770.26378, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.770.26378
49B5AA80B2130CD0EF9F8DCFBEEEAB70.taxon	materials_examined	Other material. The Creek, Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, 1970 s, photographs of one individual only, W Pridgen (Plate 5).	en	Yonow, Nathalie (2018): Red Sea Opisthobranchia 5: new species and new records of chromodorids from the Red Sea (Heterobranchia, Nudibranchia, Chromodorididae). ZooKeys 770: 9-42, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.770.26378, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.770.26378
49B5AA80B2130CD0EF9F8DCFBEEEAB70.taxon	diagnosis	Diagnosis. Uniformly white to cream mantle with no markings. Mantle colour bleeding into a more opaque white submargin. Bright blue border same thickness as opaque white band with clear distinct boundaries on both sides. Thin marginal line deep blue to black, present on both dorsal and ventral surfaces. Gills and rhinophores white, gill lamellae may tend to ochre.	en	Yonow, Nathalie (2018): Red Sea Opisthobranchia 5: new species and new records of chromodorids from the Red Sea (Heterobranchia, Nudibranchia, Chromodorididae). ZooKeys 770: 9-42, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.770.26378, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.770.26378
49B5AA80B2130CD0EF9F8DCFBEEEAB70.taxon	description	Description. This distinctive glossodorid is essentially white with a bright blue margin. The marginal pigmentation is identical in all three specimens (and the few available photographs, see Material above), and present on both sides of the mantle margin: an opaque creamy white band is followed by a light blue band and a deep blue to black marginal line. The gills are retracted into a small pocket in all but one photograph: in only one photograph of a series of photographs of the paratype specimen, the nine gills are extended: they are unipinnate with white rachides and ochre lamellae; in Plate 5 they are also extended and number at least five. They are arranged in a circlet and the last two gills are smallest. The rhinophores are tall and parallel-sided, white with faintly ochre lamellae: there are 21 lamellae in the paratype and 18 lamellae can be counted on the photograph of the 2016 non-type specimen. The rim of the rhinophore pocket is barely raised above the notum. The body is solid and the thick mantle margin is held in three permanent folds. The hyponotum and top of the foot are identical in colour to the mantle, and there is no colour what-so-ever on the foot margin or oral tentacles. The preserved holotype is fairly well relaxed and soft. It is elongated and slightly tapered at each end. The dorsum is of almost equal width and height. The mantle margin is very thin and flexible, with the permanent folds visible in the photographs present only as undulations. The foot is much longer than the mantle, and the posterior end is curled over the dorsum. The gill and rhinophore pockets are visible only as puckered holes. Viewed dorsally, the notum is pale pinkish white, the mantle margin is translucent cream. The digestive gland is visible as a dark patch halfway along the body to the left. In ventral view, it is visible as a large sphere spanning the width and depth of the body, therefore visible both dorsally and ventrally. The anterior margin of the foot is rounded and bilaminate; neither lamina is notched. The oral tentacles are two simple swellings each with a terminal nipple (Figure 2 A). The type specimens are identical in their preserved states, but the smallest third specimen has a proportionately larger mantle margin. There is no hint of the blue margins on any of the preserved specimens except where the mantle was folded over in the paratype. Mantle glands are visible in a submarginal band on the posterior half of the mantle of the paratype (which also has the front of the foot and head partly damaged). The reproductive organs of the small 15 mm preserved specimen dissected for the radula preparation were in a relatively underdeveloped state. This is not unexpected as the type specimens are twice the size. The radular formula of the small specimen is 55 x ~ 60.0. ~ 60. There is no central tooth in the row; the first tooth in each row bears five or six small rounded denticles on the inner face of the curved cusp (Figure 2 B). The remaining teeth have a straight root, longer than the cusp, and a small projection on the top. The teeth are the same shape and dimensions along the row until the last four or five, where they become very reduced in size and stacked in a line (Figure 2 C). The jaws comprise curved rodlets that are conical at the tips, which taper abruptly. They are relatively long, nearly 80 µm in length (Figure 2 D).	en	Yonow, Nathalie (2018): Red Sea Opisthobranchia 5: new species and new records of chromodorids from the Red Sea (Heterobranchia, Nudibranchia, Chromodorididae). ZooKeys 770: 9-42, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.770.26378, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.770.26378
49B5AA80B2130CD0EF9F8DCFBEEEAB70.taxon	distribution	Distribution. Endemic to the Red Sea. The first photograph of this species was taken in the 1970 s, in the vicinity of Jeddah, Saudi Arabia (see Material above). Since then, it has only been photographed a few times, indicating its rarity in the Red Sea: the collected specimens are from the same locality years apart. Despite the numerous books and websites on nudibranchs, there are no records of this distinctive species anywhere else in the world.	en	Yonow, Nathalie (2018): Red Sea Opisthobranchia 5: new species and new records of chromodorids from the Red Sea (Heterobranchia, Nudibranchia, Chromodorididae). ZooKeys 770: 9-42, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.770.26378, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.770.26378
49B5AA80B2130CD0EF9F8DCFBEEEAB70.taxon	etymology	Derivatio nominis. This species is in honour of Sven Kahlbrock, who searched many years for specimens of this beautiful but rare species. In addition, he has tirelessly supplied photographic records and many specimens in the last eight years.	en	Yonow, Nathalie (2018): Red Sea Opisthobranchia 5: new species and new records of chromodorids from the Red Sea (Heterobranchia, Nudibranchia, Chromodorididae). ZooKeys 770: 9-42, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.770.26378, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.770.26378
7241FC76E629AF2ADAD66D7BA5630F9E.taxon	materials_examined	Material. Rosalie Moller wreck, near Hurghada, Egyptian Red Sea, 28 Apr 2015, 40 m depth, 50 - 60 mm alive, 21 x 10 mm preserved leg. and photographs S Kahlbrock (SK # 3).	en	Yonow, Nathalie (2018): Red Sea Opisthobranchia 5: new species and new records of chromodorids from the Red Sea (Heterobranchia, Nudibranchia, Chromodorididae). ZooKeys 770: 9-42, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.770.26378, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.770.26378
7241FC76E629AF2ADAD66D7BA5630F9E.taxon	description	Description. The photographs perfectly fit the description of this species by Rudman (1987) (Plate 6). The dorsum is cream with a purple margin. Inside the purple margin is a broad opaque white band containing many yellow spots on the outside and very few purple spots on the inside. There is an ochre zone linking the white band to the dorsal hump, which is covered in brown patches and purple spots, and both are overlain with white spots. The rhinophores are brown with the edges of the lamellae being white. The quadrangular gills have a more complicated colour pattern, translucent with a dark brown or grey line down the edges of the pinnules on both their outer and inner sides, the pigmentation extending onto both sides of the pinnules. Some of the gills are branched or forked, and they are numerous, arranged in a double spiral around the anal papilla. The foot extends a short distance behind the mantle and is white with many round yellow spots and a purple patch on the margin. Ventrally, the preserved specimen is monochromatic. The margins of the mantle and foot are contracted and the anterior margin of the foot is bilaminate (Figure 3).	en	Yonow, Nathalie (2018): Red Sea Opisthobranchia 5: new species and new records of chromodorids from the Red Sea (Heterobranchia, Nudibranchia, Chromodorididae). ZooKeys 770: 9-42, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.770.26378, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.770.26378
7ADE4E5BAA849059BE57E019CAB74F9C.taxon	materials_examined	Other material. Quseir, Egypt, July 2000, approx. 10 mm alive (6 x 2.5 mm preserved), leg. and photographs J Hinterkircher (jaw and radular preparations); Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, photographs only from 1980 ' s, Pam Kemp, J Kuchinke, G Smith; Eilat, Israel, 18 Feb 2005, O Ledermann; near Hurghada, Egypt, 07 July 2012, 12 June 2016, S Kahlbrock.	en	Yonow, Nathalie (2018): Red Sea Opisthobranchia 5: new species and new records of chromodorids from the Red Sea (Heterobranchia, Nudibranchia, Chromodorididae). ZooKeys 770: 9-42, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.770.26378, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.770.26378
7ADE4E5BAA849059BE57E019CAB74F9C.taxon	diagnosis	Diagnosis. Body shape rounded oblong anteriorly and rounded posteriorly. Opaque white pointed tail always longer than mantle. Dorsum translucent rose centrally and whiter marginally, with meandering longitudinal opaque white lines and round rose spots. Margin translucent orange with elongated opaque white patches.	en	Yonow, Nathalie (2018): Red Sea Opisthobranchia 5: new species and new records of chromodorids from the Red Sea (Heterobranchia, Nudibranchia, Chromodorididae). ZooKeys 770: 9-42, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.770.26378, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.770.26378
7ADE4E5BAA849059BE57E019CAB74F9C.taxon	description	Description. The shape of this species is very distinctive: all photographs depict an elongated oval body of which the anterior margin is oblong and the posterior end is rounded (Plate 7). The pointed tail extends beyond the mantle, and is translucent white with an opaque white triangular marking centrally. The mantle is translucent rose with longitudinal interrupted opaque white lines and round pink spots that are ocellated with deeper rose. Around this area is a band of white patches that may be confluent, followed by a translucent orange band containing discrete white patches. The rhinophores are translucent orange with two inner opaque white areas; there are up to 12 lamellae and the translucent stalks issue from translucent, slightly raised sheaths. The 6 - 8 unipinnate gills are arranged in a simple circle; they are also translucent with opaque white cores; the orange pigment in the tips is within the translucent area. The preserved specimens are not totally contracted, and still retain the opaque white lines on the dorsum; however, no coloured spots remain on any of the specimens. The almost black digestive gland within is clearly visible. The edges of the foot are slightly crumpled, squared anteriorly, and the oral tentacles are visible as swollen nipples (Figure 4 A). The anterior margin of the foot does not appear to be bilaminate. The 2012 specimen from Hurghada is aberrant in having two left rhinophores. The notes made on the paratype on arrival read as follows: " dorsum dense, opaque dirty orange, glistening white lines, coloured areas still visible on rhinophores and gills (the latter were darker). Two left rhinophores but one right. Mantle margin distinct, separate, mantle glands visible posteriorly. Ventrally, the hyponotum a darker orange, foot lighter. Foot anterior margin angular with a slight median dent, large swollen oral tentacles. " The reproductive system is developed in the 6 mm specimen (collected in the summer), despite its being smaller than the types and the average recorded length, with ducts and glands clearly visible as well as the bursa copulatrix. This same specimen has a radular formula of 27 - 28 x 28 - 33.1.33 - 28. There is a small (up to 15 µm long) central triangular tooth medially, crowded by the first lateral teeth (Figure 4 B). The first lateral is twisted on itself, with one or two large denticles medially and a row of four small saw-like denticles laterally (Figure 4 B). The length of the cusp increases quickly to approximately tooth 9 as does the number of denticles, also to nine. In this region, the twist of the cusp is still pronounced and forms a small knob at the top of the root / cusp junction. At approximately tooth number 13 - 15 until the last five teeth, the cusps are somewhat straighter on the root with a pronounced knob on the top (Figure 4 C); the denticles are saw-like. The last five teeth are stacked together and very reduced in size, flattened plates tapering towards the end with few denticles (Figure 4 C). The jaws are composed of curved rodlets. These are bifid on the tip, with one denticle being much smaller than the other (Figure 4 D).	en	Yonow, Nathalie (2018): Red Sea Opisthobranchia 5: new species and new records of chromodorids from the Red Sea (Heterobranchia, Nudibranchia, Chromodorididae). ZooKeys 770: 9-42, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.770.26378, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.770.26378
7ADE4E5BAA849059BE57E019CAB74F9C.taxon	distribution	Distribution. Endemic to the Red Sea. The first record of this species is by Eliot (1908) from the Sudanese Red Sea in which he describes the same obvious characters of shape and colour: " Elongated and rather flat: mantle broad, especially over head. Foot ends in sharp point projecting ... Gills small and thick, seven in number, simply pinnate, the two hindmost smaller. ... Colour translucent greyish pink. ... broad undefined band of opaque white, and outside, bordering the mantle, a broad transparent orange-yellow line interrupted by opaque white spots along the edge. " The species is clearly endemic to the Red Sea, and I suspect that the Maldives locality of the second photograph in Debelius and Kuiter (2008) is erroneous.	en	Yonow, Nathalie (2018): Red Sea Opisthobranchia 5: new species and new records of chromodorids from the Red Sea (Heterobranchia, Nudibranchia, Chromodorididae). ZooKeys 770: 9-42, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.770.26378, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.770.26378
7ADE4E5BAA849059BE57E019CAB74F9C.taxon	etymology	Derivatio nominis. An unimaginative name alluding to the similarities with Goniobranchus decorus.	en	Yonow, Nathalie (2018): Red Sea Opisthobranchia 5: new species and new records of chromodorids from the Red Sea (Heterobranchia, Nudibranchia, Chromodorididae). ZooKeys 770: 9-42, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.770.26378, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.770.26378
91A8BEB0BBD06F8336B34729DB2163DE.taxon	materials_examined	Material. Wreck of ' Rosalie Moller', near Hurghada, Egypt, 01 Aug 2012, 33 m depth, one specimen approx. 50 mm (approx. 25 x 15 mm preserved, curled), leg. and photographs S Kahlbrock.	en	Yonow, Nathalie (2018): Red Sea Opisthobranchia 5: new species and new records of chromodorids from the Red Sea (Heterobranchia, Nudibranchia, Chromodorididae). ZooKeys 770: 9-42, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.770.26378, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.770.26378
91A8BEB0BBD06F8336B34729DB2163DE.taxon	description	Description. This specimen represents the first and nearest record to its type locality for a species originally described from the Red Sea 80 years ago, and is thereby removed from its incertae sedis status of Yonow (1989). It is clearly distinct and recognisable from all the Red Sea chromodorids: the body is very large, firm, and with a high profile. It is pale to dark yellow with series of large and small spots, which can be shades of red and pink, often with a red margin, and a yellow margin encircling the mantle (Plate 8). The preserved specimen is beige (examined 2013) with an orange margin. The patches and spots remain visible as red or faded red. There are red spots also present on the gill pocket, on the gills, around the margin of the hyponotum (large), and on the top of the foot (small, fading). The gonopore is surrounded by a red ring. The rhinophore pockets are white and retain their red margins. The mantle glands are visible as a series of darker yellow patches at the very posterior of the margin (Figure 5 A). Ventrally, the body is swollen, cream-coloured, and the red spots visible as opaque white slightly raised spots (Figure 5 A). The head is rounded, the tentacles just visible. The anterior margin of the foot is very angular, bilaminate, with both laminae notched. The reproductive system of the single specimen preserved in the summer is well developed. Its radular formula is> 65 x 71.0.71. There is a clear space in the middle of the complete length of the radula. The first laterals on each side are identical and asymmetrical: all the teeth are clearly bicuspid but the first lateral has an additional small sharp cusp on its inner face (Figure 5 B). The remaining laterals are typically hypselodorid and regular along the row. The last 15 or so teeth become rapidly reduced in size with the addition of a line of 3 - 5 denticles on the lower cusp (Figure 5 C). Along the posterior portion of the radula, from approximately tooth 30 (if not earlier) the teeth are secondarily denticulate (Figure 5 D). The jaws of Hypselodoris dollfusi are simple pointed rods with a slight curve (Figure 5 E).	en	Yonow, Nathalie (2018): Red Sea Opisthobranchia 5: new species and new records of chromodorids from the Red Sea (Heterobranchia, Nudibranchia, Chromodorididae). ZooKeys 770: 9-42, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.770.26378, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.770.26378
91A8BEB0BBD06F8336B34729DB2163DE.taxon	distribution	Distribution. The species is known only from the northern Red Sea (Yonow 2008), the Persian Gulf (Glayzer et al. 1984, Dipper and Woodward 1989, Gosliner et al. 2008), and the Gulf of Oman (Gosliner and Behrens 2000).	en	Yonow, Nathalie (2018): Red Sea Opisthobranchia 5: new species and new records of chromodorids from the Red Sea (Heterobranchia, Nudibranchia, Chromodorididae). ZooKeys 770: 9-42, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.770.26378, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.770.26378
12B765DCF15761BD7E1F78856B30172E.taxon	materials_examined	Material. Marine Biological Laboratory, Eilat, Israel, 09 Aug 1983, 10 m depth, one specimen 31 x 16 mm (preserved), leg. and photographs J Dafni.	en	Yonow, Nathalie (2018): Red Sea Opisthobranchia 5: new species and new records of chromodorids from the Red Sea (Heterobranchia, Nudibranchia, Chromodorididae). ZooKeys 770: 9-42, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.770.26378, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.770.26378
12B765DCF15761BD7E1F78856B30172E.taxon	description	Description / remarks. There is so much confusion surrounding this species that the Red Sea specimen is here described and illustrated in detail to enable clear recognition. As succinctly stated by Rudman (2007), a review of the genus by Valdes and Gosliner (1999) which synonymised several genera actually omitted two crucial species, and so the confusion continues. In concurrence with Rudman, Miamira magnifica is here reported as having an Indian Ocean distribution, including the Red Sea (also in Yonow 2008: 206). This is a correction of Yonow (1994) who stated that it had an Indo-West Pacific distribution because flavicostata from Australia and Japan had been included as a possible synonym. Despite much searching, this remains the only specimen record of Miamira from the Red Sea. The specimen was examined and drawn by the author when it was moribund: it was pale green with white nodules, each of which were encircled by two or three blue rings (Plate 9); the central two nodules were the largest. The shape of this central green area was like a cross of Lorraine, a longitudinal central line with two crossbars. Outside this region, the mantle was white with raised orange spots, which also were present on the slightly raised tubercles covering the sides and white hyponotum of the specimen. The demarcation between the mantle and the sides was clearly marked by orange dots. The shape of the mantle was very regular and its texture firm, the foot extended beyond it. The preserved specimen retains much of the original shape, albeit somewhat contracted, and the spots are clearly visible (Figure 6 A). The reproductive system of the single specimen was developed when it was collected in the summer. The radula comprises at least 80 rows of simply hooked teeth; there are approximately 100 teeth in a row. There is no rhachidian and the last few teeth in each row are greatly reduced in size and stacked together (Figure 6 B, C). This compares well with those of a Maldives specimen measuring a very similar 30 mm having a radular formula of 102 x approx. 90.0.90 (Yonow 1994). The jaws are simple rodlets with pointed tips and a slight curve (Figure 6 D).	en	Yonow, Nathalie (2018): Red Sea Opisthobranchia 5: new species and new records of chromodorids from the Red Sea (Heterobranchia, Nudibranchia, Chromodorididae). ZooKeys 770: 9-42, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.770.26378, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.770.26378
12B765DCF15761BD7E1F78856B30172E.taxon	distribution	Distribution. Northern Red Sea, tropical western Indian Ocean (Yonow 1994, Tibirica et al. 2017, http: // www. seaslugforum. net / showall / ceramagn).	en	Yonow, Nathalie (2018): Red Sea Opisthobranchia 5: new species and new records of chromodorids from the Red Sea (Heterobranchia, Nudibranchia, Chromodorididae). ZooKeys 770: 9-42, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.770.26378, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.770.26378
8E284E8EA3C221B0C544188668FA3414.taxon	materials_examined	Material. South of Hurghada, Egypt, 22 Jan 2009, 2 - 4 m depth on rocks during night dive, four specimens 15 - 20 mm alive approx. (6.5, 7, 7, 8 mm preserved); leg. and photographs S Kahlbrock; photographs of numerous individuals, the Creek, Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, 1970 - 1994, W Pridgen, D & S Sharabati; photographs only, vicinity of Hurghada, Egypt, 13 Aug 2012, S Kahlbrock; photographs of the type specimen, Suakin, Sudan, 25 April 1980, leg. and photographs C Todd (Australian Museum C. 131570).	en	Yonow, Nathalie (2018): Red Sea Opisthobranchia 5: new species and new records of chromodorids from the Red Sea (Heterobranchia, Nudibranchia, Chromodorididae). ZooKeys 770: 9-42, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.770.26378, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.770.26378
8E284E8EA3C221B0C544188668FA3414.taxon	description	Description. Since Rudman's (1985) and Yonow's (2008) records, Verconia sudanica has been recorded somewhat more frequently in the Red Sea (http: // www. seaslugforum. net / showall / noumsuda, https: // www. inaturalist. org / taxa / 126112 - Noumea-sudanica). It is described here from specimens collected in the northern Red Sea. The excellent series of photographs depict five individuals, of which three are grouped together (four specimens were collected). In the photograph of the group, the rhinophores and nine plumose but simply pinnate gills are all pure white. The edges of the rhinophore lamellae (numbering 9 - 11) and main axes of the gills (facing outwards) are opaque white. In photographs of a single animal, the apical one third of the rhinophore is very faintly orange, with opaque white edges to the 9 - 11 lamellae. All five animals have a white dorsum with pits and a narrow yellow margin, which is faintly darker orange at the edge (Plate 10). In two individuals, the pits are slightly yellow and in a third one, there are small conical papillae dotted on the surface. The foot is also white, and the tip is bordered with a yellow line; one photograph from the side shows that the margins of the foot are white. The preserved specimens are identical, opaque cream with a thickened but slightly lighter coloured margin containing single round mantle glands that are semi-translucent. The gill pocket is large and slightly raised and in two specimens, the unipinnate gills barely protrude. The foot extends beyond the mantle slightly in all but one specimen. The foot is angular anteriorly, and the large oral tentacles are clearly visible.	en	Yonow, Nathalie (2018): Red Sea Opisthobranchia 5: new species and new records of chromodorids from the Red Sea (Heterobranchia, Nudibranchia, Chromodorididae). ZooKeys 770: 9-42, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.770.26378, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.770.26378
8E284E8EA3C221B0C544188668FA3414.taxon	distribution	Distribution. Endemic to the Red Sea.	en	Yonow, Nathalie (2018): Red Sea Opisthobranchia 5: new species and new records of chromodorids from the Red Sea (Heterobranchia, Nudibranchia, Chromodorididae). ZooKeys 770: 9-42, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.770.26378, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.770.26378
